The explosion sends the hood of the car 50 feet in the
air. It lands with a clang next to me,
wafting acrid smoke in my face. I’m
still alive but that’s not what matters.
With a trembling hand, I reach into my coat pocket. Our ratings board submission is still intact.
Phew.
Maybe the game rating process isn’t quite that exciting but
it really is a big adventure!
So, why do game devs hate foreigners? We don’t but it might feel like that sometimes! For those of you residing in North America, you’ve
probably experienced the frustration of waiting for a game to arrive from Japan. Likewise, those of you living in Europe and
elsewhere often have to wait for North American games to make it across the
ocean. Well, you may be surprised to
find that, while money is often a factor, it’s not the only factor causing
delays. As the producer on Nutjitsu at NinjaBee, I have
recently been weighing up a number of these issues while we were preparing to
release it outside of the United States.
Allow me to share some firsthand insight to help you understand why
delays happen.
Ratings
First up, we have ratings.
As a game developer, it would be wonderful if all the countries in the
world used the same game classification board.
Unfortunately, this isn’t the case.
There is no one-stop solution to game ratings. In North America, you’ll see the ESRB while,
in Europe, it’s PEGI. Even all of Europe
doesn’t use the same ratings. Germany,
for example, has its own board with separate grading criteria.
Some countries have extensive review processes that take
many weeks while in others you can get ratings within an hour. The good news is that many of the ratings
boards appear to be making efforts to streamline their processes. They are learning to better accommodate not
only AAA game studios but also indie developers.
How did this impact Nutjitsu?
In the past, we’ve worked with publishers to obtain title ratings. With the current generation of consoles, self-publishing
titles has become a reality for many more developers. However, this comes with a caveat: we now
need to register with the various classification boards before we can even
submit our title for ratings.
Each board has their own quirks that you can only learn by
interacting with them. When we sent our Nutjitsu submission to Australia, we
provided them with a single disc containing all the materials they asked
for. It wasn’t until a couple of weeks
later that they told us we needed to provide our game on a separate disc from
the gameplay video – merely one example among many.
Localization
Some of you may be saying, “loca-what?” Basically, this is the process of translating
all the text in a game and hooking it up.
While it may not seem like it, this can be a lengthy and expensive
process.
First, the game’s text needs to be translated. This step is normally pretty straightforward. We send off the text to a translation company
with detailed instructions on context and usage. This might include screenshots, videos and
gameplay descriptions. The text will
often contain symbols where the game might be inserting a variable number or we
are coloring the text – we need to let the translators know how to handle these
too. Eventually, the text is returned,
we review it, ask questions and, as happens in game development, request
additional translations for text that needed to be altered for gameplay reasons
or for requirements of the platform holders (e.g. Sony or Microsoft).
With translations in-hand, the game now needs to be able to
identify the region in which a player is located and pass them the proper
translations. This is often where we
start to see problems.
Languages such as Spanish and German tend to
have longer translations than the original English text. This leads to text spilling out of boxes on
the screen or text looking squished. Take
this Chinese image from A World of
Keflings, for example. In English,
all of this text fit and displayed correctly.
Here you can see, once we plugged in foreign text, some of the text showed
temporary strings and none of it fit where it was supposed to. Sometimes, these need to be hand-edited to
fit and sometimes we need to go back to translators to ask for a shorter
translation.
Once translations are implemented, there’s an additional testing
cost. Larger studios will hire testers
familiar with each language to play through the game and check all of the text. Smaller studios also need to test their games
in other languages even if it’s just to make sure all the text is aligned. For a large studio, this might not be an
issue. However, for a small studio, the
cost of testing might prohibit overseas releases.
Even without a ton of text in Nutjitsu, the game still needed plenty of hand-edits and testing
once the translations came back.
Other considerations
A major problem for Nutjitsu
occurred when trying to go through the rating process for Japan and South
Korea. Neither of these countries have a
ratings process in English. This means
we needed someone who could read and write both English and Japanese or Korean
to help us through the process. In South
Korea, we were presented with an additional problem. We were required to have a registered
business there before we could go through their rating process. While not insurmountable, language barriers
made communication difficult.
Sometimes the reason for delaying a game in other regions is
a simple funding issue. A company may
need to earn money from an initial launch to fund development in other
regions.
Alternately, their reasoning could be to test the waters
before releasing to the whole world. This
is a tactic commonly employed in mobile game development where a game is
released in a small region to see if it gains traction. If it does, additional funding is gained to
address feedback and then release elsewhere.
Release timing can also play a big part in the success of a
game. Games tend to sell more in holiday
seasons or during school vacation time.
Since these vary from country to country, release times may be staggered
in different countries to better coincide with times of increased buying
activity.
Ultimately, on Nutjitsu,
we had a game that could be released much earlier in the United States because
it required no translations and we were already set up to get ratings quickly
from the ESRB. Adding region support and
obtaining ratings has been a time consuming process. Hence, the later release to other
regions.
I know it’s painful to wait for
a game to release in your country when you know others are already enjoying
it. However, in most cases, it’s a pain
felt on both sides of the coin. We, as
developers, want to bring that game to you as soon as possible!
If you’re interested
in game developer insights, follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ben_bascom @ben_bascom
5 comments:
Wow, awesome article about the insghts and insides of the gaming company. I always wondered why we were hated so much in the gaming world, now I know (I live in the Netherlands myself).
Question though: In a lot of the smaller northwestern European countries (think The Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Denmark, etc.), our native language isn't English, but we have been playing games and watching cartoons in the language since childhood. In fact, I personally hate reading and hearing the Dutch translations of the games. Is it REALLY necessary to have localization in all those countries? Where 99 out of a 100 people speak, write and read English with no problems whatsoever? Is that mandatory in our countries, and is that ordered by Microsoft and Sony? Or some organisation over here? This bugs me. I'd love to play those North American games, I speak, read and hear English everyday, but still, I have to wait on a Dutch translation that I'll end up turning of asap anyway. Thanks again for the awesome article.
*of = off ;)
As an Korean, Thank you for all your localisation efforts.
I hope your company will be huge.
@Martijn Sometimes it is out of our control. Microsoft requires we provide Dutch translations in the marketplace even if the game itself is in English. On Nutjitsu, it's something we're currently trying to workaround.
@Martijn
Ben is right, there are some requirements. We also have to consider ratings boards for each country. This can cost money and it can be complicated in many other ways. However, we will look into releasing English versions in even more countries. Watch for more news soon.
Post a Comment